Glossary

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== C ==
== C ==
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*Classical Rhetoric: theory of persuasive discourse (Perelman: see [[February 10 Class Notes]])
*Close Reading: Richards shifted the focus from general analysis to a meticulous, word-level method of interpretation, which has greatly influenced modern criticism. (Richards: see [[February 1 Class Notes]])
*Close Reading: Richards shifted the focus from general analysis to a meticulous, word-level method of interpretation, which has greatly influenced modern criticism. (Richards: see [[February 1 Class Notes]])
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*New Criticism: Richards' ideas helped establish this movement, which viewed texts as completely autonomous (Richards: see [[February 1 Class Notes]])
*New Criticism: Richards' ideas helped establish this movement, which viewed texts as completely autonomous (Richards: see [[February 1 Class Notes]])
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*New Rhetoric: theory of argumentation (Perelman: see [[February 10 Class Notes]])
*Node: Any object which is linked to another object (Slatin: see [[March 22 Class Notes]])
*Node: Any object which is linked to another object (Slatin: see [[March 22 Class Notes]])
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*Pisteis: proofs, persuasive appeals (logos, ethos, pathos); artistic (logical, logos, nonlogical, ethos and pathos) and inartistic (tangible evidence) proofs (see [[January 20 Class Notes]], from Lunsford and Ede)
*Pisteis: proofs, persuasive appeals (logos, ethos, pathos); artistic (logical, logos, nonlogical, ethos and pathos) and inartistic (tangible evidence) proofs (see [[January 20 Class Notes]], from Lunsford and Ede)
*Poeis: fine arts (see [[January 20 Class Notes]], from Lunsford and Ede)
*Poeis: fine arts (see [[January 20 Class Notes]], from Lunsford and Ede)
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*Proofs: Justification, reasoning, argumentation. (Perelman: see [[February 10 Class Notes]])
== Q ==
== Q ==
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== R ==
== R ==
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*Rationalism: truth is not sensory, but intellectual and deductive.  You only know thought through deductive reasoning.  (Perelman: see [[February 10 Class Notes]])
*Representamen: what something represents to you personally (creates in the mind of that person an equivalent sign, or perhaps a more developed sign) (Peirce: see [[January 25 Class Notes]])
*Representamen: what something represents to you personally (creates in the mind of that person an equivalent sign, or perhaps a more developed sign) (Peirce: see [[January 25 Class Notes]])

Revision as of 15:03, 22 March 2011

This page is dedicated to key terms from the readings.


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